Author
Topic: dubcats secret little hideout (Read 129811 times)

This feature should be included in Corona if you ask me! I notice this effect each time I lay down, even on rough fabrics.Next time you lie down in bed or drunk on the floor, try to look for this effect, and then go and +1 mantis!

This is a very important request. Almost all materials I do I input falloff to the ref glossiness map to mimic this behaviour. I think this could be default behaviour - I think 90% of materials work this way (visually). So +1 from me.

Which lut was used for this? Also was it applied in max corona or in PS?I have been trying to achieve the same gradient like fall off in corners for soo long now and i just cant. Default interiors just look so flat and i resort to blending AO in ps, but its just not the same.

Would you mind talking about how that was achieved? Any clues would be great!

Hi dubcat. I am trying to rebuild some old corona materials with the new BPR settings, and wanted to use your IOR excel shead, but I cant get permission to download it. So would it be possible to get you to make a new/different link to this (for example Dropbox)?

I went into my Canon/Nikon folders and selected 3 random LUTs. I got a lot of Canon 60D LUTs in there, so one of them might be 60D.

Canon cameras have this magenta Tint to them, sometimes -10 green. This happens even if you calibrate the camera as perfect as you can. We need to use the sexy Tint feature in CameraRAW to get a perfect white balance. Since I'm dumping the real deal, I left this error in there. If you notice a slight magenta shift, it's a Canon LUT 99%.

Canons best friend.

and a big thanks to everyone else that has responded!

If you are a canon user, you should try magiclantern. It's a custom firmware that extends camera capabilities. There is a withe balance function that can actually correct the magenta shift.